Building a Sake Collection
A thoughtful sake collection is both a learning tool and a source of pleasure. Learn how to select, store, rotate, and enjoy a home sake library that spans styles, regions, and aging potential.
ガイド
## Why Collect Sake
A sake collection serves multiple purposes: it ensures you always have the right sake for any meal or occasion, it enables side-by-side comparisons that accelerate learning, and it provides the satisfaction of curating a personal library of flavors.
## The Foundation Collection (10 Bottles)
Start with bottles representing the core spectrum:
1. A clean {{glossary:futsu-shu}} or economy junmai for everyday drinking and cooking.
2. A classic {{glossary:honjozo}} — versatile, food-friendly, warm-able.
3. A {{glossary:junmai}} from a traditional region (Nada or Fushimi).
4. A {{glossary:junmai-ginjo}} with aromatic character (look for Kyokai No. 9 or No. 14 yeast).
5. A {{glossary:junmai-daiginjo}} for special occasions.
6. A {{glossary:kimoto}} or {{glossary:yamahai}} showing traditional richness.
7. A {{glossary:namazake}} (unpasteurized) for freshness reference.
8. A {{glossary:nigori}} (cloudy sake) for texture contrast.
9. A sparkling sake for aperitif occasions.
10. An aged {{glossary:koshu}} for complexity reference.
## Storage Requirements
Sake is more perishable than wine or spirits. Essential storage conditions:
- **Temperature**: 5-15 degrees Celsius for most sake. Namazake requires full refrigeration (0-5 degrees). A dedicated wine fridge set to 10-12 degrees handles most needs.
- **Light**: Complete darkness. UV light is sake's worst enemy, causing rapid degradation. Store in a closed cabinet or fridge.
- **Position**: Upright storage is standard for sake (unlike wine, cork drying is not a concern — most sake uses screw caps or plastic stoppers).
- **Humidity**: Not critical for sake, unlike wine.
## Rotation Strategy
Unlike wine, most sake does not improve with extended cellaring. Rotate your collection:
- **Drink within 6 months**: Namazake, sparkling, light ginjo.
- **Drink within 1 year**: Most junmai, honjozo, junmai ginjo.
- **Age 1-3 years**: Robust junmai, kimoto, yamahai, genshu.
- **Age 3+ years**: Intentional koshu candidates — full-bodied junmai, kimoto, high amino acid sake.
## Seasonal Acquisition
Align purchases with the sake calendar:
- **January-March**: Shiboritate (freshly pressed) and shinshu (new sake).
- **April-June**: Spring limited releases, hanami sake.
- **July-August**: Natsu-zake (summer sake), sparkling releases.
- **September-October**: Hiyaoroshi (autumn release) — the collector's favorite season.
## Tasting Notes
Keep a simple journal or spreadsheet logging each sake: name, grade, rice, prefecture, purchase date, opening date, and tasting impressions. Over time, this record reveals your preferences and guides future purchases. Many sake apps (Sakenomy, Saketime) automate this process.
## The Joy of Discovery
The best collections are not the most expensive but the most thoughtfully curated. A $20 junmai from an obscure Tohoku brewery that perfectly matches your grilled fish is more valuable than a $100 daiginjo that sits unopened. Collect what you will drink, and drink what you collect.